Ad Nut
Jan 9, 2018

Scoot uses VR to show what's 'Permitted on board' its 787

Quirky characters provide a pleasant enough tour, but Ad Nut has questions about such uses of VR, and the airline's supposed benefits.

Working with Untitled Project, Scoot has created a virtual tour of its newest airliner, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

As part of a wider campaign titled 'Permitted on board', the brand will bring the VR experience to popup locations in high traffic areas in China, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Australia, Japan, Taiwan and Indonesia. 

Viewers receive a 3D tour of the ‘Scoot Economy’, ‘ScootBiz’ and ‘ScootinSilence’ cabins, which are populated by a variety of 2D animated characters including children playing football, several people who will not stop dancing, a miniature Bruce Lee, a device-happy robot and a levitating yogi.

All in all, it's a pleasant enough way to pass a few minutes. And Ad Nut supposes that given the novelty of VR, people might even queue up to view it at one of the pop-up locations.

That said, touring a passenger jet is just not much of a draw, as immersive experiences go. There's nothing wrong with Scoot trying to promote its ambiance and in-flight features, nor with Untitled Project's execution. But, if brands don't offer more compelling experiences via VR, people will quickly become jaded about popup VR experiences. They'll become nothing but another ad format to avoid. And that would be a shame.

Moving on the the actual message rather than the medium, some of the supposed benefits Scoot is touting here seem silly. For example, wide aisles are not an incredibly attractive feature, since you're meant to stay seated with your seat belt on most of the time. And certainly playing football in the aisles is likely to be frowned upon.

Then, at about 1:20 in the video above, the friendly flight attendant offers an incredible "tip" for maxing out your space in economy class: booking the seats around you. LOL. Ad Nut is not sure whether this is simply wishful thinking on the brand's part, or whether the brand is really trying (but failing) to argue that for the price of one seat on a full-service airline, you could have two seats on a Scoot flight. But either way it's bizarre and laughable. Nice try, but I'm not going to pay double just so I can have a bigger personal space bubble. 

Ad NutAd Nut is a surprisingly literate woodland creature that for unknown reasons has an unhealthy obsession with advertising. Ad Nut gathers ads from all over Asia and the world for your viewing pleasure, because Ad Nut loves you. Check out Ad Nut's Advertising Hall of Fame.

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Judi Dench's agents go undercover at the opera in ...

Ad marks third in series by features director John Madden.

1 day ago

Why creativity remains at an all-time premium

The age of Gen AI might be here, but the era of creativity isn't anywhere near over, says Mirum's Hareesh Tibrewala.

1 day ago

Mixed-reality marketing: how AR can help future-proo...

No longer an expensive add-on, augmented reality can now present a low cost and novel way to reach new audiences in a media saturated world.

1 day ago

Social overtakes search for adspend in landmark ...

Meta alone is on track to surpass all global linear TV in advertising revenue by 2025, driven by investment in AI tools such as Advantage+, according to a new worldwide report.